Wery v. Pacific Trust Co.

33 Haw. 701, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 33
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1936
DocketNo. 2159.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 33 Haw. 701 (Wery v. Pacific Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wery v. Pacific Trust Co., 33 Haw. 701, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 33 (haw 1936).

Opinion

*702 OPINION OE THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

Emil Wery died testate in Honolulu. June 7, 1930, at the age of seventy-seven years, seized and possessed of considerable real and personal property subsequently appraised in the proceedings upon probate of his will at fifty-four thousand odd dollars. The deceased was survived by his widow and three children, the latter the issue by a former wife named Hattie who died in July, 1916. The will of the deceased consisting of an original will and codicil thereto dated February 14, 1925, and October 9, 1928, respectively, having been admitted to probate, two of the surviving children filed a bill in equity to declare a trust of the property composing the estate of the testator for the benefit of the surviving children. The lower court granted the relief prayed.

Appellants’ assignments of error are mainly directed to the findings of fact and conclusions of laAV of the trial judge involving the ultimate issues. Two of the assignments present for revieAV the admission of evidence. Neither in our opinion affects the ultimate results and will not be considered except to the extent that one raises a *703 question of professional ethics which the court feels, in justice to the attorney involved, should be determined.

E. R. McGhee, Esquire, an attorney of this court appeared as a witness on behalf of complainants and testified over objection of appellants to certain alleged prior contradictory statements made to him by William Wery one of the respondents who appeared as a witness on behalf of himself and his corespondents. This the appellants assigned as error upon the grounds: (1) That such statements were privileged, the relation of attorney and client having at the time the statements were made existed between Mr. McGhee and William Wery and (2) that such statements were elicited by Mr. McGhee in response to questions propounded by him to William Wery at a time when Mr. McGhee was the attorney for Emily Wery Hudson one of the complainants in this case and William Wery was one of the respondents and represented by- counsel other than Mr. McGhee, contrary to the canons of ethics of the American Bar Association. The second ground of error does not present any legal objection to the admission of the evidence and will not be considered.

The evidence in this case supports the following findings: That though not her attorney of record Mr. McGhee was acting as the attorney for Mrs. Emily Wery Hudson in the instant case; that although not the attorney of record Mr. McGhee was also- acting as the attorney for Mrs. Hudson and William Wery, her brother, in the matter of the application of Mrs. Hudson to register the title of certain lands in Hilo pending before the land court at the time of the trial of the instant case; that Mr. McGhee was never employed by William Wery in any matter directly or indirectly connected with the instant case and that the alleged prior contradictory statements were made by Mr. Wery upon the occasion of his consult^ *704 tion with Mr. McGhee in connection with said application for registration of title.

Under the findings the statements made by Mr. Wery to Mr. McGhee were not privileged. It is true they were made by a client to his attorney but they had reference not to the subject matter of the attorney’s employment but to matters outside of the scope of that employment in reference to which the relation of attorney and client did not exist. Where the details of professional employment and the various steps necessary to its performance are not limited by the client in any way and the conduct of the business and the means of its accomplishment are committed to the attorney’s discretion the scope of an attorney’s employment is extremely broad and includes not alone such authority as it expressly conferred but all such authority as may be implied as flowing therefrom. Anderson v. Rawley Co., 27 Haw. 60, 63. But it cannot be said that the scope of Mr. McGhee’s employment in the land registration matter included the representation of William Wery in the instant case. Especially is this so, Mrs. Hudson and her brother Mr. Wery being opposing parties in the instant case and Mr. Wery represented by other counsel. To be privileged the communications of a client to his attorney must be in relation to matters within the scope of the attorney’s employment. Moyers v. Fogarty, 119 N. W. (Ia.) 159; Denunzio’s Receiver v. Scholtz, 77 S. W. (Ky.) 715, 716.

The merits. It is the contention of the petitionersappellees, hereinafter referred to as appellees, that the property of which the testator died seized and possessed had its source in a lease to him taken in his name from the Bishop of the Catholic Church in Hawaii dated June 1, 1895, which the testator acquired on behalf of his wife Hattie with money belonging to her whereby a “resulting” trust in said lease was created, whereof the testator *705 was the trustee and his wife Hattie was the beneficiary; that said property represented the rents, issues and profits of said lease augmented and increased by the investment and reinvestment of the same; that the testator declared to his wife Hattie and after her death to their children and by his conduct and otherwise recognized that he held the said lease and the net rents, issues and profits thereof and the property into which, for the time being, said rents, etc., had been converted by investment and reinvestment first for her benefit and after her death for their benefit whereby an “express and constructive” trust was created, whereof the testator and after his death his legal representatives were successive trustees and his said wife Hattie during her lifetime and after her death their children were successive beneficiaries subject upon the death of Hattie to his statutory right of curtesy.

The question crucial to the determination of the issues herein is whether a resulting trust was created in the estate for years granted on June 1, 1895, by the lease from the Bishop of the Catholic Church in Hawaii to the testator as lessee for the benefit of his wife Hattie. If no resulting trust for the benefit of the mother of appellees were created in the estate thus demised then the claim of the. appellees that the property composing the estate of the testator was but the accumulations of the investment and reinvestment of the net issues and profits of said lease, falls, except as the evidence may sustain the voluntary declaration by the testator of a trust of all his property, first for the benefit of his wife and after her death for the benefit of their children.

Sufficient has been said upon the law of resulting trusts by this court and by single justices sitting alone in equity to obviate the necessity of any extended discussion of the subject. See Montgomery v. Montgomery, 2 Haw. 563; Jarrett v. Manini, 2 Haw. 667; Keawe v. Parker, 6 *706 Haw. 489; Olepau v. Rahapa, 7 Haw. 175; Kanoelehua v. Cartwright, 7 Haw. 327; Lazarus v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Anastasi v. Fidelity National Title Insurance Co.
341 P.3d 1200 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2014)
Colman v. Heidenreich
381 N.E.2d 866 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1978)
Fairfield v. Medeiros
431 P.2d 296 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1967)
Robinson v. McWayne
35 Haw. 689 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1940)
De Mello v. De Mello
34 Haw. 922 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1939)
Ishida v. Naumu
34 Haw. 363 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Haw. 701, 1936 Haw. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wery-v-pacific-trust-co-haw-1936.